Good Saturday morning: here's an update on what’s happening with Michigan and the U.S. Senate.

This edition, we look at the happenings with U.S. Sens. Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow.

Plauge of sexual assault Levin said this week there is a “plague of sexual assaults in the military.”

The Pentagon released a study this week that showed the number of sexual assaults reported by members of the military rose from 3,192 to 3,374 in 2012, according to the Associated Press. The number of unreported assaults could be as many as 26,000.

The comments came after Air Force Lt. Col. Jeffrey Krusinski was charged with groping a woman. Krusinski was on the sexual assault unit and was removed from his post after the arrest.

"While under our legal system everyone is innocent until proven guilty, this arrest speaks volumes about the status and effectiveness of (the Defense) department's efforts to address the plague of sexual assaults in the military," Levin said, according to the AP.

Stabenow on Morning Joe: Friday morning Debbie Stabenow was on the MSNBC program Morning Joe to talk about a new bill, the Excellence in Mental Health Act.

“Its about making sure there is comprehensive community mental health services,” Stabenow said.

Currently, community health organizations can’t get reimbursements for mental health treatment. The bill would expand treatment to an additional 1.5 million Americans.

Envoy to GITMO: On Thursday, Levin called on the White House to have a special envoy to Guantanamo Bay.

In a letter to the White House, Levin wrote:

"I urge the President to appoint an official inside the White House to spearhead an interagency effort to determine which of the more than eighty detainees who have already been cleared for transfer by the Guantanamo Detainee Review Task Force meet the certification (and waiver) requirements [in current law], and to actively work for their transfer,"

According to Politico, Levin suggests in the letter that “restrictions Congress has imposed on transfers from Guantanamo are not so severe as to warrant the near-halt in releases in the past couple of years.”